The Mount Joy bulletin. (Mount Joy, Penn'a.) 1912-1974, September 04, 1912, Image 4

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    THE BULLETIN,
MOUNT )OY,
PA.
Mis. G. H. WiLLiams, of Lynnhaven, Va, wrote:
since my health gave way.
(1 employed three) said | would die,
had to hire someone all the time. Finally, I read in the papers about
Dr. Pierce's Favorite Prescription, and decided to try it.
taken but one bottle until 1 found it had done me good.
five bottles of ‘Favorite Prescription’ and two of ‘Golden Medical
Discovery,’ and now 1 am able to do all my housework, and have gained
to try your ‘ Favorite Prescription,’
Summer
a dollar or two
pairs as low as half price.
See Windows for Great Bargains
Get $2 to $4 Oxfords
We fit you just as carefully, as though you paid
OXFORDS FOR MEN
.50, $4, #5 and $6 now $2.45, $2.35
3 Oxfords
SIIAUB & CO.
3007S, SHOES, RUBBERS and d0SIEAY
8 N. Queen Street
PTT TTETYY TY
her sister, Mrs. Priscilla Fogie.
ppearance of a
nnininred nortion
in field while
prices ranging
Old Folks and Harvest
is a charter mem-
subject, using for
choir rendered
vices were well
a rich means of Grace to
variety of fruits on
dispaly, were donated to the paswor
and his family, and were thankful-
——————-
Our Home Markets
Butter, per Ib.
Eggs, per doz.
Lard. per Ib.
Potatoes, per bu.
Corn, per bu.
Oats, per bu.
HOW TO PRESERVE YOUTH AND BEAUTY.
One great secret of youth and beauty for the young woman or the mother is
the proper understanding of her womanly system and well-being.
young or old, should know herself and her physical make up.
arrive at this knowledge is to get a good doctor book, such for instance, as '' The
People's Common Sense Medical Adviser,
readily be procured by
Dr. Pierce, at Buffalo, N. Y
The womanly system is a delicate machine which can only be compared to the in-
tricate mechanism of a beautiful watch which will keep in good running order only
with good care and the proper oiling at the right time, so that the delicate mech-
anism may not be worn out,
get old or run down before their time through ignorance and
the improper handling of this human mechanism,
depression, a confused head, backache, headache, or hot
flashes and many symptoms of derangement of the womanly
system can be avoided by a proper understanding of what to
do, in those trying times that come to all women,
Every woman,
A good way to
" by R. V. Pierce, M., D., which can
sending thirty-one cents for cloth-bound copy, addressing
Very many times young women
Mental
“It is six years
1 had female trouble and all the doctors
I was not able to do my work,
1 had not
1 took, in all,
I advise all women who suffer from female trouble
It's the only medicine on earth,”
oe de eels Beeline dine
ah Sh oh J a a a i 4
hoes Reduced
less than usual; many
for $1 to $2
at $1.85
-
NT ASTER
2 2 Sook
La a
I.
20k
ree
sues sfusfuofocfesfusiesfosiosforfesfosfocfosferlesfesfesfifosfonnrofefostecfocfosfecfefedife de Be Be Bo fe
+
28 Booed:
wre La
rrsstinson
| PASSED AN UNQUIET NIGHT
Traveler, Lost in the Bush, Was Glad
to Do Without the Blessings of
Slumber,
But I had never given a thought te
the course 1 had taken in my gallop
across the veldt. I kept on and on, and
before long it grew dark and some-
what cold. So I dismounted, and aft-
er thinking it over, I knee-haltered the
horse and let him go, crept head first
into a large ant-bear hole for a night's
lodging, and made myself as comfort-
possible under the circum-
the blesbok hide for a
able as
stances, using
blanket. The night was dark as
pitch.
Sleep was ou: of question. I sup-
pose it was the haunches and the raw
hide that attracted the creatures, but
before long it really seemed as if I
1d settled down in a village of wild
rs and insulted the whole commu-
To gin with, squealing inces.
they seemed to be racing round
1 a circle, taking me for its
len a number of jackals
irawing nearer and nearer, joined in
discovered
the chorus. But I soon
that if I disliked the noise I fairly
dreaded the silence. During the quiet
spells I knew that something was
chewing industriously at the project-
ing ends of the raw hide in which I
was enveloped. It was hard work for
me to keep from kicking incessantly,
but whenever I rested for a minute
the chewing developed into vigorous
tugs, the significance of which it was
easy for one in my position to appre-
ciate.
However, I kicked the night through
in safety, and early in the morning, to
my delight, I found my horse a short
distance away, nibbling contentedly at
his breakfast.—Atlantic Monthly.
Most Popular Character.
Charles Dickens once received am
invitation to a “Walter Scott” party,
each guest being expected to attend
in the character of one or another of
Scott’s heroes. On the eventful night,
however, greatly to the astonishment
of the assembled Rob Roys and Wa-
;, Dickens turned up in ordinary
and apparently quite
At length the host, who
dress
ed
unconceri
was fee g uneasy, came up to the
novelist and inquired:
“Pray, Mr. Dickens, wh jaractep
u possit be supe
h iid Dickens. “Why,
gir. a character vou will find in every
one of Scott’s novels. I,” he went on,
smilingly, “am the ‘gentle reader.’”
Terrible Ordeal.
was perfectly frightful,” sald
ybleigh “There we ran at top |!
i around the corner, and the first
I kuew we dashed plumb into
that grocer’s wagon. I guess It must
have held a hundred dozen eggs.”
“Oh, well, that wasn’t se bad, was
it?” said Hicks. “You could afford
to pay for 'em, couldn't you?”
“Oh, it wasn’t that,” said Chubbleigh, |
with a shudder. “But I don’t believe
there was a good egg in the whole lot.”
~—Harper's Weekly.
Killed at Comewago.
Sotta Dameff, aged thirty years,
watchman at the Conewago cut of
the Pennsylvania Railroad, was in-
stantly killed by a freight train at
one o'clock on Tuesday morning:
Deputy Coroner Harry Miller, of
Elizabethtown, was notified, who
with his physician, Dr. A. S. Blough,
to the A jury was
empanneled, which after viewing the
body returned a verdict of accidental
repared scene.
death. His meck and one arm were
brc ken. The body was taken to an
undertaking establishment in Eliza-
bethtown, where it was prepared
for burial and shippea to the
deceased's brother at Steelton.
This is the sceond fatality that oc-
curred at the same place to watch-
men within the last three months.
———————— RL
| (Copyright,
| sort
Selling
the House
By Herbert Drocer
by Associated Literary
Press.)
1912,
Times were hard out in Kansas dur
| ing the fall of 1907, and the real estate
concern of J. Bixby & Co. felt itself
so hard pressed that Mr. Jermy Bixby,
| president, sole proprietor and only rep-
resentative of sald above business, ex.
periences a sincere regret when he
eame down to his office one morning,
following a night on which he had
mortgaged his brain to his heart, that
he had proposed marriage to Miss Jes-
gle Carter, the village schoolmarm.
And, worse, he had been accepted.
Jermy's affection for Miss Jessie
was of the deepest and most sanguine
he had first settled in the place, but,
| further than showing her little atten-
tions and accompanying her to church
each Sabbath evening, he had made
no open profession of his feelings tod
ward her until under the spell of the
moonlight and that October evening,
the night before, he did the thing he
meant not to do.
All in good time, Jermy had intends
ed to ask Miss Jessie to become his
bride. But he was awaiting the day
when he could feel himself establish.
ed before making an offer of such
serious character. And that day had
almost arrived.
Out in one of the new additions to
the town that had been plotted only
the preceding summer, Jermy had
erected a house on a couple of lots
that had fallen to him as a part of
the commission due him for promot-
{ng the new section. For balance on
account with the town site company,
he had accepted more lots
So far as a short-sighted mortal can
ed that he was
judge, Jermy con
on the high road t art's desire.
He took every dollar he had, and bor-
rowed a little besides, to put into the
new house, which he intended as a
home for himself and Jessie. Of
course he would have to some
cash to get married on, to buy house-
have
hold furniture and to pay living ex-
penses for a month or two, or until
he should be able to get a commis-
sion somewhere.
For such exigencies, he had reck-
oned on the additional lots. With
things booming in that end of town,
“But She Doesn’t Know.”
matter only
al bank and
he figured it would
of form to go to t
pledge his propert) whatever
small sum he might ask. And so it
would have been, but for the panic.
As he entered morn-
ing after that ni had
gone riotous in Jermy
flung the mail he had just taken from
the postoffice on his desk. An enve-
lope on the top of the package caught
eye. He opened it and found a
statement from the local bank, calling
attention to his overdrawn account.
It was this little pri slip that
had caused Jermy to regret pro-
posal as he yout kindling a fire
in the flat recta wood stove
that stood in the «¢ * of the room.
tl
e and call
his office the
rht
when things
breast
his
his
went ¢
At first he
Je
ent.
er more deliberate consideration,
he resolved to tal his troubles to
Mrs. Bain, the landlady, who had
watched his courts erncouragingly
during the last ars
That ever ved home late
3
! manages to
16 1 fter the
other boarders had table.
Then he arose to assist Bain
with the dishes, the course of
which he led up 3 conversation to
Jessie and finally succeeded in telling
the kind-hearted matron of his dilem-
ma.”
“But, laws, you needn't worry,” ex-
claimed Mrs. ain. “Jessie, you
| know, has saved up money from her
teaching, and wouldn't hesitate to ad-
vance you a little, if you need it, es-
pecially you be going to marry her.”
“But that’s just it, Mrs. Bain,” he
remonstrated. “I couldn’t think of let-
ting her do it.”
“Let her? She'd just do it anyhow,
if she knowed.”
“But she doesn’t know, and won't
know, and besides she couldn't draw
more than just a small amount from
the bank at present, even if she had
a million dollars on deposit.”
“Don’t you just be too sure,” re-
turned the woman. “That's a mighty
smart girl, and if she wanted to do
——————————
The Trials of a Traveler
“I am a traveling salesman,”
writes E. E. Youngs, E. Berkshire, |
Vt., “ and was often troubled with
constipation and indigestion, till
began to use Dr. King’s
Pills, which I have found an excel-
lent remedy.”
er or kidney troubles they are un-
equaled. Only 25¢ at S. B. Bernhart
& Co's.
He had felt it for years, since
{which
New Life
For all stomach, liv-|
something, she'd do It somehow,
money or no bank."
Mrs. Balin went out to shut up her
chickens for the night, and Jermy
took a chair on the front porch to
pmoke, Later, he went Inside to cau
tion the landlady to say nothing toy
Jessie; but he could find her no-
where. She had not returned when
he retired to his room near midnight,
The next morning Mrs Bain|
knocked at his door a half hour
earlier than usual, He turned to his
watch and observed the difference in
time, but dressed and went downs
stairs. He found Mrs. Bain alone.
“Little early this morning, aren't
you?" he asked
“Yes, | wanted to talk with you be-
fore them others came on.” Folding
her hands beneath her apron, she
proceeded: “Mr. Bixby, why don't
you sell the house?”
“Sell it? Why, Mrs. Bain, you
know why I built it, and now you
ask me to dispose of it.”
“Yes, | take it to be the best way.
Then you'd have enough money for
you and Jessie to get fixed up on, and
you could come and board with
cheap, until times got better,
then you could sell some of your lots
and build another house then, when
you could afford it.”
“Why, nobody could buy that house
give me half
now, Mrs. Bain, and
what I put into it.”
“Oh, yes, they could.”
“Who?”
“Oh, I know, if you'll only do it."
“Well—" he hesitated. As others
of the boarders began to appear, he
to-
“I'll tell you
added hurriedly:
night.”
That afternoon Jermy was sitting
alone in his office, with his feet
propped up on a desk, debating the
matter to himself, when Mr. Stanley,
president of the bank, appeared.
Jermy brought his feet down with a
bang, and arose in confusion.
“[—J]—Mr. Stanley,” he faltered, “I
was just thinking of stepping over to
gee you about my account, but—"
“No reason for that,” returned the
other, cordially.
you about your new house. I
client who wants to buy it.”
“Well. I hadn't thought about sell
ing,” answered Jermy, himself again.
Then calculating:
had anything I wouldn't sell, if there
were the inducements.”
have a
“Well, how would $2,000 strike
you?”
“Two thousand dollars?’ he ex
claimed, but recovered his composure,
and asked: “And who pays your
commission, Mr. Stanley?”
“That is already provided for by
my client.”
“Then I'll sell, Mr. Stanley. Whose
name do you want in the deed?” turn-
desk and pulling out a
for conveyance.
ing to his
blank form
“Just leave that space blank for the
present. My client wants to pay
down $300 in cash—money in hand,
understand—and the
the name is filled im and the
delivered by myself as third
Is that satisfactory?”
“That suits, I guess.”
Alone in his office again, Jermy
threw his hat into one corner and lay
you
when
deed
party.
back in his chair, chuckling over his
good luck
“Two thousand dollars!” he ex-
claimed “It’s settled—we'll marry.
We'll have plenty for a honeymoon
trip to my folks in Missouri. Then, if
the deed has not been delivered, we
ay at Mrs. Bain’s awhile, and
the balance is paid, there'll be
to settle my debts and build
a new house besides. Glory!”
They were married at high noon the
first Tuesday in November. It was
planned that they should leave on the
1:25 o'clock afternoon train for Kan-
sas City, and thence to the home of
his parents Af the dinner had
been served and while the party await-
ed carriages to take them to the
depot, Mr. Stanley stepped up
Jermy and asked for a moment of his
time.
The banker led
other room, followed by Jermy and
his bride.
“Just a little business,” Mr. Stanley
sald, by way of introduction. He
fumbled with some papers and drew
out a fountain pen.
“Here's a certificate of deposit to
your credit, Mr. Bixby, for $1,700,”
he resumed. “Now you will please fill
out the space left blank.”
gh
enou
“What name?’ asked Jermy, tak-
ing the pen
“Mrs.— uhm,” as he cleared his
voice, maintaining a stolid expres-
gion, “Mrs. Jessie Bixby.”
Jermy was dumfounded.
“What!” dropping the pen and
turning to his 1 You—you?” he
cried, and grasped her in 5
“You bought the place?”
“Yes,” she replied
“And just to think that the deal
alone wasn't half the bargain.”
Average Sleep Is Eight Hours.
Usually the amount of sleep is in
inverse ratio to the strength and de-
velopment of Thus,
children need more sleep than adults.
Some men need very little rest, and
the same may be said of women. How-
ever, eight hours {is the average
amount required by the human body to
restore its vitality by complete rest.
If less is taken one’s health is apt to
be impaired. A good night's sleep
will do more toward building up gen-
eral health than all the Ponies known,
consciousness.
Light Summer Reading.
An advertisement of a book on the
fitanic disaster appears in The Jeffer-
son City Post. It savs: “Entertaining-
ly stating the facts as related by eye
witnesses. Everything told in agree-
able terms that | a degree
cination and ren ]
fog
las-
Inne
‘ elable.”—Kans=
\
A Mail Box That Travels
Because he is badly crippled,
Benjamin Wissler of Mt. Joy town-
has his R. F. D. mail box,
is 700 feet from his house,
hung on an endless wire operated by
a windlass and is thus carried from
road te house and back. 3
ship,
es
Reat che Mt. Joy Bulletin
Advertise in the Mt.
Read the Bulletin
%
»
mae,
and
“] came over to see
“Of course I never
balance
to
the way into an-|
A
Joy Bulletin.
|
THE GAME SEASON
A Few Birds and Animals May be
shot After September 1
The coming game season will be
of winsusl force tera. ss of the
fact that it Is likely to be the last
season in which the people of the
stute may hunt without paying a li-
cense A determined effort will be
made to have the next legislature
pass a hunter's license law by which
hunter will be obliged to pay
every
$1.
The first game animal to be avall-
able to the hunters of this section Is
the raccoon Up until a year ago
this animal was not protected but
now it may be hunted only from
September 1 to December 31, in-
of birds
come in on the same date, duck and
clusive, A number water
included
The game to come
being
geese
in next
and woodcock, both of
which available after October 1.
Bear may be killed until the first of
season
is the bear
are
the year but woodcock may be hunt-
ed only until Dec, 31. There is no
limit to the number of bears that
may be killed but no hunter may
kill more than ten woodcock in one
day, twenty in a week or fifty in a
season
On Nov | the hunting season
comes in with a rush, the majority
of the animals and birds that are
in this vi-
on
regarded as good game
being available
Included
or
cinity,
that
and after
in the list
partridge,
date are
wild
The
class
pheasants, quail
rabbits and
all
with
ruffled grouse or pheasant
be killed
fifty
be
in a week or 75
turkeys, squirrels
cpason of the game in this
December 15.
closes
Of the
five may in a day, twenty
Ten
day,
Wild
to one a day or
Of the black fox
gray squirrels the number is lim-
in a season
killed
in
in a week or
partridges may in a
a season.
limited
turkeys are
two in a season
or
ited to six of the combined kinds in
a day. Ten rabbits are the limit
for a day
half a month in
killed,
Nov. 15
One male
the
There is but
which deer may be the sea-
and end-
with
the
with
30th,
starting
the
son
with
ing
horns visible above hair is
limit for the season.
that
may
birds
and which
are the
the not
killed
Eng-
Among are
be
jay,
protected
at any time blue
different
barred
the ani-
any time
starling,
crow and
lish sparrow,
kinds of hawks,
Among
killed
red
horned owls.
that
and
mals can be at
are the pine or squirrel, pos-
ground hog,
and
sum, wood-chuck or
mink, weasel, wildcat polecat
aterm seat nn sucess
Auto
automobile
Accident
accident
Another
Another oc-
curred Saturday, evening shortly be-
the
East
the
accident Saturday
The car which
fore 8 o'clock on State Road,
from Petersburg
from
about a mile
and
auto
not far scene of an
on night a
figured in
accident
Groff,
Groff, of Leola,
Charles
Bair
week ago
last Saturday night's
operated Chester
er, son of Wayne I.
was
by the own
and wiih him were and
David
All but one in
party were injured. The
the careless manner
which the chaffeur rounded a curve
four
the
accident
in
l.ester Cooper, and
voung ladies.
due to
was
A ATE WES SET Be
EWES
TH
EQ FE
4 =
&
Wednesday, September 4,
CONVENTION IN LANCASTER SALE REGISTER
A Notice ln This List is Read by Se
eral Thousand People Weekly
Will Meet October
Friday, Sept. 6
Joy, a carload
ern horses and colts ranging from
Presbyterian church to 5 years by D, B, Kieffer & Co. C.
10--On the prem=
Joy township,
a tract of 98
Tuesday, Sept,
sions and conferece of the elemetary
superintendents,
superintendents acres of limestone land
delegates from
in the country,
Sunday School
work, this promises to be the largest
kind ever held in
acres of gravel
mprovements,
Summy, auct
convention of the
by E. 8S. Metzler.
Saturday, Sept.
carload of Crawford
given much study and active work in by Ed Ream.
the primary work of the schools, will
19—On the prem
Joy township,
Elizabethtown, a tract
land containing
Thursday, Sept.
talent will take part in the exercises.
the county association, and Jacob G. provements by
have a complete advertisement,
census of the work accomplished by
during the vear ending
with frame house, bank barn and all
outbuildings by
administratrix
sociation, at its fiftieth convention in
11. will award a bronze medal to the
miles west of Mount Joy, a tract
of the features
convention will he the big parade of barn, tobacco shed, and outbuildings
men from the Organized
Shelly, adms.
Harrisburg pike,
west of Florin
tract of land with brick house, frame
meses ol lie premises along the
MIDDLETOWN FAIR
Big Dauphin County Exhibition Will
Be Held Next Week
the village of
{of ground, with frame house, frame
[stable, carpenter shop and outbuild-
13th annual exhibition of the
Thursday and Friday,
to eclipse all previous ex-|
East Donegal
for some time]
: : : Kravbill’ "
getting the grounds in readiness for| Kraybill's Church,
and scores of exhibit-!
The applications for exhibiting space Si as
THE SHIPPEN SCHOOL,
The trustees of the
» greatly in excess of all
home of Mr. H, S. Williamson, when
enlarging the
along the lines that have
consideration
numerous, furnish-
entertainment
racing events each day
section, and it is the intention of the
day, with free vaudeville each day of frustees to still
front of the grand stand
The poultry exhibition this year will munity, where its influence for good
ae mere ffm semen
4
ARERR RRR REE,
& CO.
TELE REL
LEINBACH
: All Our Wash Goods Sacrificed
The time has come for the absolute clearance of every yard
prices have already been several
= These Fabrics Are Clear and Perfect-You Will Need Them For Indoor Wear This
Winter and They Are Well Worth Storing Away For Next Spring,
“Are Sensational In The Extreme
a
Pi
® summer wash goods-and-so,althou
n we now announce another still greater reduction
n
®
E
= ———————————————————— A
a As These Values
a
m
u
.
a groun
ies an
this price.
sil
you are ac
vou make.
Up to 15cts. Values, 5cts.
Several hundred yards in this lot, consisting of 614 calicoes,
ds: toc. dress ginghams, in plaids, checks, stripes and plain,
lawns batistes, of fine, sheer quality, in floral and figured designs.
Up to 25cts. Values, 10cts.
This lot is one the biggest values in good, clean wash goods offered in many a day-
127; c. percales—extra fine quality just the kind you'll needa
d swisses the prettiest wash goods of all them beautiful new patterns,
Up to 29cts. Values, 15cts.
This is te cream of our wash goods stocks—-women will keep the scissors busy at
Beautiful woven colored flaxons and sheer voiles, with flcral borders- or
k stripes- some of these patterns are the prettiest of the season.
AND NOW? ARE YOU ONE OF THE THOUSANDS OF PEOPLE IN LAN-
CASTER COUNTY WHO ARE SAVING S. & H. GREEN TRADING STAMPS
If not, now is the time to find out jnst what you are missing. How much money
tually throwing away by not getting S. & H. Stamps with every purchase
The amount at the end of the year would surprise you.
and ecomy of saviug these famous stamps.
Jac. and 15¢
11 winter, and 25c. or:
0 0 C1)
Think ofthe profit
1 001
I
47-49 North Queen Street, Lancaster, Pa.
RSE EEE
oT now da ER i B 1